Medical informatics and preparedness.
Author(s): Brennan, Patricia Flatley, Yasnoff, William A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1060
Author(s): Brennan, Patricia Flatley, Yasnoff, William A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1060
The Patient-Centered Access to Secure Systems Online (PCASSO) project is designed to apply state-of-the-art-security to the communication of clinical information over the Internet.
Author(s): Masys, Daniel, Baker, Dixie, Butros, Amy, Cowles, Kevin E
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1005
The goal of this study was to complete a literature-based needs assessment with regard to common pediatric problems encountered by pediatric health care providers (PHCPs) and families, and to develop a problem-based pediatric digital library to meet those needs. The needs assessment yielded 65 information sources. Common problems were identified and categorized, and the Internet was manually searched for authoritative Web sites. The created pediatric digital library (www.generalpediatrics.com) used a [...]
Author(s): D'Alessandro, Donna, Kingsley, Peggy
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0991
In January 2000, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and the National Library of Medicine (NLM) cosponsored an invitational workshop entitled "Medical Informatics and Health Services Research: Bridging the Gap." Planned by a small committee of representatives from NLM and AHRQ institutional training centers, the workshop was designed to address the need for education of researchers interested in working at the intersection of the fields of medical informatics [...]
Author(s): Corn, Milton, Rudzinski, Karen A, Cahn, Marjorie A
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0971
Reams of data pertaining directly to the core health services research mission are accumulating in large-scale organizational and clinical information systems. Health services researchers who grasp the structure of information systems and databases and the function of software applications can use existing data more effectively, assist in establishing new databases, and develop new tools to survey populations and collect data. At the same time, informaticians are needed who can structure [...]
Author(s): Mandl, Kenneth D, Lee, Thomas H
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m0973
The events that followed the launch of Sputnik on Oct 4, 1957, provide a metaphor for the events that are following the first bioterroristic case of pulmonary anthrax in the United States. This paper uses that metaphor to elucidate the nature of the task ahead and to suggest questions such as, Can the goals of the biodefense effort be formulated as concisely and concretely as the goal of the space [...]
Author(s): Wagner, Michael M
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1049
During the 2001 AMIA Annual Symposium, the Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Emergency Medicine Working Group hosted the Roundtable on Bioterrorism Detection. Sixty-four people attended the roundtable discussion, during which several researchers discussed public health surveillance systems designed to enhance early detection of bioterrorism events. These systems make secondary use of existing clinical, laboratory, paramedical, and pharmacy data or facilitate electronic case reporting by clinicians. This paper combines case reports of [...]
Author(s): Lober, William B, Karras, Bryant Thomas, Wagner, Michael M, Overhage, J Marc, Davidson, Arthur J, Fraser, Hamish, Trigg, Lisa J, Mandl, Kenneth D, Espino, Jeremy U, Tsui, Fu-Chiang
DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m1052
Author(s): Hersh, William R, Patterson, Patricia K, Kraemer, Dale F
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090089
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the uses of handheld computers (also called personal digital assistants, or PDAs) in family practice residency programs in the United States.
Author(s): Criswell, Dan F, Parchman, Michael L
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090080
Supplement 23 to DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications for Medicine), Structured Reporting, is a specification that supports a semantically rich representation of image and waveform content, enabling experts to share image and related patient information. DICOM SR supports the representation of textual and coded data linked to images and waveforms. Nevertheless, the medical information technology community needs models that work as bridges between the DICOM relational model and open object-oriented [...]
Author(s): Tirado-Ramos, Alfredo, Hu, Jingkun, Lee, K P
DOI: 10.1136/jamia.2002.0090063